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Thursday April 21, 1994 Vol. CXXII, No. 63
Weather
Low clouds will obscure the sun for most of the day, but there is a chance of them clearing by the afternoon. The temperature will reach a high in the 70s and a low in the 50s.
Inside
I
1
Hansen, Hovorka out of shadows
Hidden under the USC men's tennis team's success this season are the contributions made by Brett Hansen and Lukas Hovorka, who have helped out in their own unique ways.
Sports, page 20
Dancers unite pizazz with ‘Zap’
The Los Angeles Choreographers & Dancers will present a modern dance and tap repertory tonight at Bovard Auditorium. The performance features dancer Moya Sullivan.
Diversions, page 10-11
The DT Reader Survey is here!
This is your chance to let us know what you think. Open up to page 4 and fill out the reader survey designed to help us better serve you.
Viewpoint, page 4
F.Y.I.
Soccer fair in Santa Monica
Legacy Tour '94 is kicking off a nine-week crosscountry soccer celebration this weekend at Santa Monica Pier. There will be a "Soccer 'til You Drop Marathon,” an international food court, soccer all-stars and live entertainment.
The festival is free and participants will learn about soccer, have a chance to see the World Cup Trophy and enter a drawing for World Cup tickets or a car.
For more information, call Legacy Tour '94 at 1-800-FUN-IN94. The event will take place from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Friday and from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday.
Women trashed in media, report says
Symposium on sex, gender and culture to be held
By Nik Trendowski
Staff Writer
"Trashing, bashing and flashing" — that's the treatment women get in the media today, says renowned feminist theorist Betty Friedan.
Though coverage of women in front-page stories has increased from 11 to 25 percent of the total over the past year, coverage tends to be derogatory, said a report issued by Women, Men and Media, a group Friedan co-chairs, which is affiliated
with USC's School of Journalism.
The group will also be holding a symposium called "Sex, Violence or Love Between Equals 1994" on April 28. Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique and The Fountain of Age, is scheduled to be the opening speaker at the event.
"Far more than men, women are portrayed on the front page negatively . . . whereas men are primarily there in terms of actual achievements and as opinion-
makers," Friedan said. "There is still a preponderance of images that trash, bash and flash women, denying the reality that we have, now, an image of love between equals in the White House and all across the country.
"The media is obsolete," she said. "It hasn't caught up with that (reality)."
Friedan also said there is a preponderance of negative images not only in the media but (St
ee Friedan, page 2) Betty Friedan
Paying homage to the colors
Jonathan Fo*/ Dally Trojan
The combined Army, Navy and Air Force color guard presents the flags at the university's annual ROTC tri-service parade last Saturday at Cromwell Field.
Engineering prof tapped by Mortar Board
By Kim Smith
Staff Writer
The four students in Mechanical Engineering 513: Principles of Combustion found their class unexpectedly livened up with music and candles Wednesday evening, when six members of Mortar Board, including one of their classmates, tapped the professor as the last Faculty of the Month of the spring semester.
"It is very special," said Fokion N. Egolfopoulos, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, about the award. "It is a great honor because the greatest honor for a teacher is to be liked by the students."
"It is most difficult to teach young people," he said. "If you can teach a professor, that's nothing. If you can teach young people, that proves you know a lot."
Lori Adrian, a senior majoring in aerospace engineering and a member of Mortar Board, sponsored Egolfopoulos for the award.
(See Tapping, page 6)
Snooker’s feels sting of police crackdown
Bar’s owners say business has been targeted unfairly
By David Lipin
Staff Writer
Ever since four minors were arrested for drinking alcohol at Snooker's, business just hasn't been the same.
Jeff Nader, the owner / manager of Snooker's Jazz Bar and Grill, blames the police department and a March 10, 1994, Daily Trojan article for the woes of his bar.
The article reported the arrests and citations that resulted from the Southwest Police Department's undercover investigation of area bars.
The article also included accusations made by the Southwest Police Department in regard to Snooker's alleged permit violations.
Both Nader and his wife, Roya Nader, who helps in the bar's operation, said Snooker's reputation and profits have suffered.
"This was the first time ever that any minors were caught in Snooker's," Roya Nader said. "If a person is caught, a minor, in front of his friends, it's a total embarrassment.
"If the cops come in and they (the minors) get nervous and pull out the real ID and they get into trouble, then what happens is they go out there and they say 'Don't go to Snooker's, the police bust you,' " Roya Nader said.
Jeff Nader said the arrested students used fake identifications — something he can't control.
The use of fake IDs is common among university students, said a University Village security officer who requested anonymity. The officer also said, however, that Snooker's could have been more aggressive in checking IDs.
LAPD Sgt. Ken Santalla re-
fused to comment on whether fake IDs were involved in any of the arrests, but Vice Officer Ros-coe Jolla agreed that fake IDs are very common.
To combat the use of fake IDs, all bars have access to books that illustrate each state's official ID. The book describes specific characteristics, such as color, photo backdrop and picture positioning, as a means to recognize fake IDs.
Today, Snooker's is using an ID book in addition to requiring two forms of ID for admission into the club. Minors are only allowed in the club for dinner and not after 10 p.m.
Though the Naders refused to divulge Snooker's financial position, Jeff Nader said his competitors are reaping the benefits of Snooker's stricter policy.
"If you check any of the area clubs . . . you will find so many violations," he said. "They're doing business, where 1 have to have my security people here and be very hard about minors.
I don't even allow one minor in my establishment, and then someone else is doing business
with them. If minors are not supposed to go to a club and drink, they're not supposed to go to any other club either.
"They don't come to Snooker's because they're too afraid we're not going to allow them in or they're going to get caught by cops, when they can go to any other club," Jeff Nader said. "I wish the LAPD and I wish the other authorities and people who have been really hard on us could check those people and treat everybody the same."
While the Naders believe they were unfairly targeted by the police, the owner of the 901, Ann Arensdorf, believes police investigations are a part of the business.
"At the time of the citation, we had the police here two to three times a week — this is nothing new," Arensdorf said. "It goes in spurts. They like to make their appearance when school starts."
Arensdorf also said her business has not experienced a financial loss as a result of the March investigation. This could (See Drinking, page 6)

Thursday April 21, 1994 Vol. CXXII, No. 63
Weather
Low clouds will obscure the sun for most of the day, but there is a chance of them clearing by the afternoon. The temperature will reach a high in the 70s and a low in the 50s.
Inside
I
1
Hansen, Hovorka out of shadows
Hidden under the USC men's tennis team's success this season are the contributions made by Brett Hansen and Lukas Hovorka, who have helped out in their own unique ways.
Sports, page 20
Dancers unite pizazz with ‘Zap’
The Los Angeles Choreographers & Dancers will present a modern dance and tap repertory tonight at Bovard Auditorium. The performance features dancer Moya Sullivan.
Diversions, page 10-11
The DT Reader Survey is here!
This is your chance to let us know what you think. Open up to page 4 and fill out the reader survey designed to help us better serve you.
Viewpoint, page 4
F.Y.I.
Soccer fair in Santa Monica
Legacy Tour '94 is kicking off a nine-week crosscountry soccer celebration this weekend at Santa Monica Pier. There will be a "Soccer 'til You Drop Marathon,” an international food court, soccer all-stars and live entertainment.
The festival is free and participants will learn about soccer, have a chance to see the World Cup Trophy and enter a drawing for World Cup tickets or a car.
For more information, call Legacy Tour '94 at 1-800-FUN-IN94. The event will take place from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Friday and from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday.
Women trashed in media, report says
Symposium on sex, gender and culture to be held
By Nik Trendowski
Staff Writer
"Trashing, bashing and flashing" — that's the treatment women get in the media today, says renowned feminist theorist Betty Friedan.
Though coverage of women in front-page stories has increased from 11 to 25 percent of the total over the past year, coverage tends to be derogatory, said a report issued by Women, Men and Media, a group Friedan co-chairs, which is affiliated
with USC's School of Journalism.
The group will also be holding a symposium called "Sex, Violence or Love Between Equals 1994" on April 28. Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique and The Fountain of Age, is scheduled to be the opening speaker at the event.
"Far more than men, women are portrayed on the front page negatively . . . whereas men are primarily there in terms of actual achievements and as opinion-
makers," Friedan said. "There is still a preponderance of images that trash, bash and flash women, denying the reality that we have, now, an image of love between equals in the White House and all across the country.
"The media is obsolete," she said. "It hasn't caught up with that (reality)."
Friedan also said there is a preponderance of negative images not only in the media but (St
ee Friedan, page 2) Betty Friedan
Paying homage to the colors
Jonathan Fo*/ Dally Trojan
The combined Army, Navy and Air Force color guard presents the flags at the university's annual ROTC tri-service parade last Saturday at Cromwell Field.
Engineering prof tapped by Mortar Board
By Kim Smith
Staff Writer
The four students in Mechanical Engineering 513: Principles of Combustion found their class unexpectedly livened up with music and candles Wednesday evening, when six members of Mortar Board, including one of their classmates, tapped the professor as the last Faculty of the Month of the spring semester.
"It is very special," said Fokion N. Egolfopoulos, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, about the award. "It is a great honor because the greatest honor for a teacher is to be liked by the students."
"It is most difficult to teach young people," he said. "If you can teach a professor, that's nothing. If you can teach young people, that proves you know a lot."
Lori Adrian, a senior majoring in aerospace engineering and a member of Mortar Board, sponsored Egolfopoulos for the award.
(See Tapping, page 6)
Snooker’s feels sting of police crackdown
Bar’s owners say business has been targeted unfairly
By David Lipin
Staff Writer
Ever since four minors were arrested for drinking alcohol at Snooker's, business just hasn't been the same.
Jeff Nader, the owner / manager of Snooker's Jazz Bar and Grill, blames the police department and a March 10, 1994, Daily Trojan article for the woes of his bar.
The article reported the arrests and citations that resulted from the Southwest Police Department's undercover investigation of area bars.
The article also included accusations made by the Southwest Police Department in regard to Snooker's alleged permit violations.
Both Nader and his wife, Roya Nader, who helps in the bar's operation, said Snooker's reputation and profits have suffered.
"This was the first time ever that any minors were caught in Snooker's," Roya Nader said. "If a person is caught, a minor, in front of his friends, it's a total embarrassment.
"If the cops come in and they (the minors) get nervous and pull out the real ID and they get into trouble, then what happens is they go out there and they say 'Don't go to Snooker's, the police bust you,' " Roya Nader said.
Jeff Nader said the arrested students used fake identifications — something he can't control.
The use of fake IDs is common among university students, said a University Village security officer who requested anonymity. The officer also said, however, that Snooker's could have been more aggressive in checking IDs.
LAPD Sgt. Ken Santalla re-
fused to comment on whether fake IDs were involved in any of the arrests, but Vice Officer Ros-coe Jolla agreed that fake IDs are very common.
To combat the use of fake IDs, all bars have access to books that illustrate each state's official ID. The book describes specific characteristics, such as color, photo backdrop and picture positioning, as a means to recognize fake IDs.
Today, Snooker's is using an ID book in addition to requiring two forms of ID for admission into the club. Minors are only allowed in the club for dinner and not after 10 p.m.
Though the Naders refused to divulge Snooker's financial position, Jeff Nader said his competitors are reaping the benefits of Snooker's stricter policy.
"If you check any of the area clubs . . . you will find so many violations," he said. "They're doing business, where 1 have to have my security people here and be very hard about minors.
I don't even allow one minor in my establishment, and then someone else is doing business
with them. If minors are not supposed to go to a club and drink, they're not supposed to go to any other club either.
"They don't come to Snooker's because they're too afraid we're not going to allow them in or they're going to get caught by cops, when they can go to any other club," Jeff Nader said. "I wish the LAPD and I wish the other authorities and people who have been really hard on us could check those people and treat everybody the same."
While the Naders believe they were unfairly targeted by the police, the owner of the 901, Ann Arensdorf, believes police investigations are a part of the business.
"At the time of the citation, we had the police here two to three times a week — this is nothing new," Arensdorf said. "It goes in spurts. They like to make their appearance when school starts."
Arensdorf also said her business has not experienced a financial loss as a result of the March investigation. This could (See Drinking, page 6)